Combined Image Enhancement, Feature Extraction, and Classification Protocol to Improve Detection and Diagnosis of Rotator-cuff Tears on MR Imaging
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Purpose: The diagnosis of most rotator cuff tears (RCTs) relies upon magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, but direct capture of MR images without enhanced image processing leads to poor image contrast and potential misdiagnosis. Therefore, we developed a 2-stage model for the detection and diagnosis of injury of the supraspinatus tendon.<br/>Methods: The first stage used coupled weighted histogram separation (WHS) to improve image enhancement, and the second stage extracted suspicious texture, features of both spatial and spectral domains, and sequential floating forward selection (SFFS) selected features conducive to classification of RCTs. We then tested injuries of the supraspinatus tendon using the classifier.<br/>Results: The extraction of features by SFFS can increase detection of supraspinatus injury by reducing the input vector by 57.78% from the enhanced input images. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve indicated an azimuth (Az) value of 84.38% when SFFS selected 76 features to construct a support vector machine (SVM) classifier from the enhanced images, compared with 56.94% when all 180 features from the raw input images were used for the construction.<br/>Conclusions: The performance of the classifier constructed by SFFS-selected features is superior to that using all features. These findings can serve as references to improve diagnosis and treatment of supraspinatus injuries.
- 日本磁気共鳴医学会の論文
日本磁気共鳴医学会 | 論文
- Development of a Hyperpolarized ^Xe System on 3T for the Rat Lungs
- Diagnosis of Unruptured Intracranial Aneurysms : 3T MR Angiography versus 64-channel Multi-detector Row CT Angiography
- Sensitivity of an Eight-element Phased Array Coil in 3 Tesla MR Imaging : A Basic Analysis
- Superparamagnetic Iron Oxide (SPIO) MRI Contrast Agent for Bone Marrow Imaging : Differentiating Bone Metastasis and Osteomyelitis
- Correlation between High Field MR Images and Histopathological Findings of Rat Transplanted Cancer Immediately after Partial Microwave Coagulation